2010 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 2010 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament started Saturday, March 20, 2010, and was completed on Tuesday, April 6 of the same year with University of Connecticut Huskies defending their title from the previous year by defeating Stanford, 53–47.

2010 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Season2009–10
Teams64
Finals siteAlamodome
San Antonio
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (7th title, 7th title game,
11th Final Four)
Runner-upStanford Cardinal (4th title game,
9th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachGeno Auriemma (7th title)
MOPMaya Moore (Connecticut)
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«20092011»

Tournament procedure

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Pending any changes to the format, a total of 64 teams will enter the 2010 tournament. 32 automatic bids shall be awarded to each program that wins their conference's tournament. The remaining 36 bids are "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The tournament is split into four regional tournaments, and each regional has teams seeded from 1 to 16, with the committee ostensibly making every region as comparable to the others as possible.[1] The top-seeded team in each region plays the #16 team, the #2 team plays the #15, etc. (meaning where the two seeds add up to 17, that team will be assigned to play another).

The basis for the subregionals returned to the approach used between 1982 and 2002; the top sixteen teams, as chosen in the bracket selection process, hosted the first two rounds on campus.

The Selection Committee will also seed the entire field from 1 to 64.

Notable events

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The top seeded Tennessee Lady Vols faced the Baylor Lady Bears in the Memphis Regional semifinals. This was a rematch of the season open for the two teams, a game won by Tennessee 74–65. Earlier in March, the freshman center for Baylor, Brittney Griner had broken the nose of Jordan Barncastle in a game against Texas Tech, which resulted in Griner playing more tentative, concerned about drawing attention to the referees. She was not tentative in the game against the Lady Vols, scoring 27 points and recording ten blocks. Despite her performance, Tennessee led by five points with under eight minutes to go in the game. Baylor then went on a 21–1 run to take a 15-point lead, and command of the game. Baylor won 77–62 to advance to the regional finals.[2]

Stanford more than doubled up Georgia, winning 73–36 in the regional semifinal, then faced Xavier. Although Stanford opened up an early five-point lead, Xavier cut the lead to one. The Cardinal extended the lead to five again, and the Musketeers cut the lead to two points at the half. Stanford opened up a six-point lead in the second half, but Xavier responded to take a lead. With just under a minute to go, Xavier took a two-point lead and Kayla Pedersen hit a jumper to tie the game at 53 points apiece. With 18 seconds left, Xavier ran a play that opened up Delaquese Jernigan under the basket. She received the ball, and missed a point-blank uncontested layup. The rebound came out beyond the three-point line to Amber Harris. The Cardinal were trying to cover the Xavier players, but missed Jernigan standing by herself under the basket. Harris passed the ball in to Jernigan who took an uncontested layup and missed it again. With only four seconds left in the game Jeanette Pohlen drove the length of the court, weaving among defenders, and threw up a shot with under a second left.[3] The shot went in and the Cardinal won 55–53 to advance.[4]

In the Kansas City Regional, both top seeds were upset in the semifinal round. Kentucky, led by 21 point from A'dia Mathies, opened up a lead ant he second half, extended it to 19 points, and were victorious, beating Nebraska 76–67 to advance to the regional finals.[5] The regional semifinal game was a second of the season for Oklahoma and Notre Dame, a game the Irish has won in the regular season. In this game the score was tied early, while Oklahoma took a slim lead at the half. They extended the lead to eight points in the second half, but Notre Dame took the lead back at 50–49. With less than a minute to play, Oklahoma took a three-point lead, but Skyler Diggins hit a three-pointer to tie the game at 66 points each. Oklahoma had the ball for the last possession, but never got a shot off, so the game went to overtime. The game was tied with 72 points for each team with seconds to go when Oklahoma had another chance. This time, Nyeshia Stevenson hit a three-pointer, giving the Sooners a three-point lead with just over four seconds to go. Notre Dame tried a long inbounds pass, but were unsuccessful, and Oklahoma won 77–72.[6]

In the Dayton Regional, Connecticut prevailed easily. They held their first three opponents to under 40 points each. While Florida State, in the regional final, managed to 50, the Huskies scored 90. This set up a game against Baylor in a semifinal game. The Baylor Bears would not go so easily. The Huskies seemed to be on the same track as prior games, with a 13-point lead at halftime. Kalana Greene scored the first basket of the second half, extending the lead to 15 points. However, Baylor then scored the next twelve points, cutting the lead to three. Connecticut, which had missed eight consecutive shots, began hitting again, and their defense held Baylor without a field goal for over seven minutes. UConn scored 16 points during the stretch and rebuild the lead. UConn would go on to win the game 70–50, to reach the championship game.[7][8][9]

After the close call against Xavier, the Cardinal seemed in control in their game against Oklahoma in the second half when they led by 18 points. However, the Sooners, concentrated on defense, and cut the lead to three points with only 16 seconds left in the game. On the inbounds play, Oklahoma failed to guard Nnemkadi Ogwumike, and Kayla Pedersen made a long pass to an open Ogwumike who made an open layup to extend the lead to five points. Then Stanford stole the ball, was fouled, and hit the final two free throws to complete the victory 73–66. Ogwumike scored 38 points, including the final seven of the game for Stanford.[10]

Stanford entered the national championship game on a 27-game winning streak. The last game they had lost, occurred in December 2009. It was against Connecticut. The UConn team entered the national championship game on a 77 winning streak. The last game they had lost, occurred in April 2008. It was against Stanford.[11]

UConn was no stranger to low scoring halves in an NCAA game. There had been, up to this point, eleven halves of basketball in NCAA tournament history with twelve or fewer points. UConn was involved in four of them. On three occasions, involving Southern University in 2010, Long Island University in 2001, and Temple in 2010, the Huskies held their opponents to twelve or fewer points. However, on this day, Connecticut would be on the opposite side of the ledger, scoring only 12 points against Stanford in the first half. The first two minutes gave no indication of this result. UConn held a 5–0 lead just over two minutes into the game, but they would not score again until after the media timeout with under eight minutes to go in the half. Connecticut hit but 5 of their 29 shot attempts in the first half for a shooting percentage of 17% described by the New York Times as "laughable". However, their inability to hit a basket did not prevent them from playing defense, and they held the Cardinal to 8 baskets on 31 shots, a percentage the Times called "abysmal". Stanford ended the half with an 8-point lead.

The second half proved to be very different. UConn scored 17 of the first 19 points in the half and took a lead. They held Ogwumike, who had scored 38 points in the semifinal, to eleven points. They held Jayne Appel, one of the nation's leading centers, to zero points on 0–12 shooting. Appel was playing on a sore ankle that required pain killers during the game. Maya Moore scored 23 points for UConn and Tina Charles contributed eleven rebounds. In the end, Connecticut won 53–47 to win their seventh national championship and complete the first back-to-back undefeated seasons in NCAA history.[12][13]

2010 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues

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First and Second rounds (Subregionals)

Austin
Berkeley
Knoxville
Minneapolis
Norfolk
South Bend
Tempe
Louisville
Palo Alto
Durham
Norman
Seattle
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Tallahassee
Ames
2010 NCAA subregionals — Green 21 & 23 March — Orange 20 & 22 March

The format is the same as the Men's Tournament, except that there are 64 teams and no play-in game. There are 31 automatic bids for conference champions and 33 at-large bids available.The subregionals, based on the "pod system" keeping teams at or close to home, will be at these locations from March 21 through 24. Prior to the committee's decision to expand the number of subregional sites to sixteen, eight sites were chosen. This list included the Sun National Bank Center in Trenton, New Jersey. When the decision was made to increase the number of sites to sixteen, Trenton declined to participate.

The remaining seven sites continue to be part of the final list of sixteen:[14]

As per the expansion of the subregional sites, these nine sites were added in 2008:[14]

That list included Albuquerque, but Albuquerque had to withdraw, due to construction issues. The NCAA added Stanford, as a replacement:[15]

Note: Unless otherwise indicated, all locations are on-campus sites.

Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight (Regional semifinals and finals)

Dayton
Kansas City
Memphis
Sacramento
San Antonio
2010 NCAA Regionals and Final Four — Blue 27 & 29 March — Purple 28 & 30 March

The Regionals, named for the city rather than the region of geographic importance since 2005, which will be held from March 28 to 31, will be at these sites:[14]

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

This is the second time the women's Final Four will be played in San Antonio, having previously been played in the city in 2002.

Tournament records

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  • Points in a Final Four game—Nnemkadi Ogwumike scored 38 points, the second most ever in an NCAA Final Four game in the National semifinal between Stanford and Oklahoma
  • Free throws—Nnemkadi Ogwumike, Stanford, hit 12 free throws in the semifinal against Oklahoma, tied for the most free throws completed in a semifinal game.
  • Free throws—Stanford attempted four three throws in a game against Connecticut, the fewest free throws attempted in an NCAA Tournament game.
  • Blocked shots—Brittney Griner, Baylor, blocked 14 shots in the second-round game against Georgetown, the most blocked shots recorded in an NCAA Tournament game since blocks began being recorded in 1988.
  • Free throws—Iowa State completed zero throws in a game against Connecticut, tied for the fewest free throws completed in an NCAA Tournament game.
  • Blocked shots—Baylor blocked 16 shots in the second-round game against Georgetown, the most blocked shots recorded in an NCAA Tournament game.
  • Three-pointers—Maya Moore hit 20 three-point field goals, tied for the most three-point shots completed in an NCAA Tournament.
  • Blocked shots—Brittney Griner, Baylor, blocked 40 shots, the most blocked shots recorded in an NCAA Tournament since blocks began being recorded in 1988.
  • Three-pointers—Connecticut hit 47 three-point field goals, tied for the most three-point shots completed in an NCAA Tournament.[16]

Qualifying teams – automatic

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Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2010 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2010 NCAA tournament.[16]

Automatic Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
Austin PeayOhio Valley Conference15–1711–716
Bowling GreenMAC27–614–212
ChattanoogaSouthern Conference24–816–413
Cleveland StateHorizon League19–1311–715
ConnecticutBig East33–016–01
DukeACC27–512–22
East Tennessee StateAtlantic Sun Conference23–818–214
GonzagaWest Coast Conference27–414–07
HamptonMEAC20–1112–415
James MadisonColonial26–613–59
LamarSouthland26–713–314
LehighPatriot League29–313–113
LibertyBig South Conference27–514–213
Louisiana TechWAC23–811–514
MaristMAAC26–715–312
Middle Tennessee StateSun Belt Conference25–517–110
Ohio StateBig Ten30–415–32
Portland StateBig Sky Conference18–149–715
PrincetonIvy League26–213–111
San Diego StateMountain West21–1010–611
South Dakota StateSummit League22–1014–414
SouthernSWAC23–814–416
St. Francis (PA)Northeast Conference17–1411–715
StanfordPac-1031–118–01
TennesseeSEC30–215–11
Texas A&MBig 12 Conference25–710–62
TulaneConference USA26–612–412
UC-RiversideBig West Conference17–1511–516
Northern IowaMissouri Valley Conference17–1510–816
VermontAmerica East26–613–310
XavierAtlantic 1027–314–03

Qualifying teams – at-large

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Thirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.[16]

At-large Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
BaylorBig 1223–99–74
DaytonAtlantic 1024–711–38
DePaulBig East21–119–711
Florida StateAtlantic Coast26–512–23
Fresno StateWestern Athletic27–616–013
GeorgetownBig East25–613–35
GeorgiaSoutheastern23–89–75
Georgia TechAtlantic Coast23–98–66
Green BayHorizon27–415–312
HartfordAmerica East27–416–010
IowaBig Ten19–1310–88
Iowa StateBig 1223–711–54
KentuckySoutheastern25–711–54
LSUSoutheastern20–99–77
Michigan StateBig Ten22–912–65
Mississippi StateSoutheastern19–129–77
NebraskaBig 1230–116–01
North CarolinaAtlantic Coast19–116–810
N.C. StateAtlantic Coast20–137–79
Notre DameBig East27–512–42
OklahomaBig 1223–1011–53
Oklahoma StateBig 1223–109–74
RutgersBig East19–149–79
St. John's (NY)Big East24–612–46
TCUMountain West22–812–49
TempleAtlantic 1024–811–38
TexasBig 1222–1010–66
UALRSun Belt26–617–111
UCLAPacific-1024–815–38
VanderbiltSoutheastern22–109–76
VirginiaAtlantic Coast21–99–55
West VirginiaBig East28–513–33
WisconsinBig Ten21–1010–87

Bids by conference

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Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In nineteen cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from twelve of the conferences.[16]

BidsConferenceTeams
7Big 12Texas A&M, Baylor, Iowa St., Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St., Texas
7Big EastConnecticut, DePaul, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Rutgers, St. John's NY, West Virginia
6Atlantic CoastDuke, Florida St., Georgia Tech, North Carolina, North Carolina St., Virginia
6SoutheasternTennessee, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi St., Vanderbilt
4Big TenOhio St., Iowa, Michigan St., Wisconsin
3Atlantic 10Xavier, Dayton, Temple
2America EastVermont, Hartford
2HorizonCleveland St., Green Bay
2Mountain WestSan Diego St., TCU
2Pacific-10Stanford, UCLA
2Sun BeltMiddle Tenn., UALR
2Western AthleticLouisiana Tech, Fresno St.
1Atlantic SunEast Tenn. St.
1Big SkyPortland St.
1Big SouthLiberty
1Big WestUC Riverside
1ColonialJames Madison
1Conference USATulane
1IvyPrinceton
1Metro AtlanticMarist
1Mid-AmericanBowling Green
1Mid-EasternHampton.
1Missouri ValleyUNI
1NortheastSt. Francis PA
1Ohio ValleyAustin Peay
1PatriotLehigh
1SouthernChattanooga
1SouthlandLamar
1SouthwesternSouthern U.
1SummitSouth Dakota St.
1West CoastGonzaga

Tournament seeds

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Dayton RegionalUniversity of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordRPIBerth type
1ConnecticutBig East33–01Automatic
2Ohio StateBig Ten30–49Automatic
3Florida StateACC26–514At-large
4Iowa StateBig 1223–726At-large
5VirginiaACC21–917At-large
6St. John'sBig East24–620At-large
7Mississippi StateSEC19–1245At-large
8TempleAtlantic 1024–833At-large
9James MadisonCAA26–637Automatic
10Middle TennesseeSun Belt25–523Automatic
11PrincetonIvy26–251Automatic
12Green BayHorizon27–470At-large
13LehighPatriot29–362Automatic
14Louisiana TechWAC23–876Automatic
15St. Francis (PA)Northeast17–14152Automatic
16SouthernSWAC23–8190Automatic
Memphis RegionalFedEx Forum, Memphis, Tennessee
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordRPIBerth type
1TennesseeSEC30–23Automatic
2DukeACC27–55Automatic
3West VirginiaBig East28–510At-large
4BaylorBig 1223–915At-large
5GeorgetownBig East25–618At-large
6TexasBig 1222–1013At-large
7LSUSEC20–929At-large
8DaytonAtlantic 1024–740At-large
9TCUMountain West22–842At-large
10HartfordAmerica East27–427At-large
11San Diego StateMountain West21–1052Automatic
12MaristMAAC26–749Automatic
13Fresno StateWAC27–635At-large
14LamarSouthland26–7107Automatic
15HamptonMEAC20–11130Automatic
16Austin PeayOhio Valley15–17176Automatic
Sacramento RegionalARCO Arena, Sacramento, California
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordRPIBerth type
1StanfordPac-1031–12Automatic
2Texas A&MBig 1225–76Automatic
3XavierAtlantic 1027–311Automatic
4Oklahoma StateBig 1223–1012At-large
5GeorgiaSEC23–825At-large
6VanderbiltSEC22–1021At-large
7GonzagaWest Coast27–430Automatic
8IowaBig Ten19–1343At-large
9RutgersBig East19–1424At-large
10North CarolinaACC19–1138At-large
11DePaulBig East21–1131At-large
12TulaneConference USA26–641Automatic
13ChattanoogaSouthern24–875Automatic
14East Tennessee StateAtlantic Sun23–887Automatic
15Portland StateBig Sky18–14184Automatic
16UC RiversideBig West17–15163Automatic
Kansas City RegionalSprint Center, Kansas City, Missouri
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordRPIBerth type
1NebraskaBig 1230–14At-large
2Notre DameBig East27–57At-large
3OklahomaBig 1223–108At-large
4KentuckySEC25–719At-large
5Michigan StateBig 1222–916At-large
6Georgia TechACC23–932At-large
7WisconsinBig Ten21–1028At-large
8UCLAPac-1024–822At-large
9NC StateACC20–1334At-large
10VermontAmerica East26–639Automatic
11Arkansas-Little RockSun Belt26–656At-large
12Bowling GreenMAC27–647Automatic
13LibertyBig South27–564Automatic
14South Dakota StateSummit22–10105Automatic
15Cleveland StateHorizon19–13123Automatic
16Northern IowaMissouri Valley17–15117Automatic

Bids by state

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The sixty-four teams came from twenty-eight states, plus Washington, D.C. Tennessee had the most teams with six bids. Twenty-two states did not have any teams receiving bids.[16]

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2010
BidsStateTeams
6TennesseeAustin Peay, Chattanooga, East Tenn. St., Middle Tenn., Tennessee, Vanderbilt
5CaliforniaSan Diego St., Stanford, UC Riverside, Fresno St., UCLA
5OhioBowling Green, Cleveland St., Ohio St., Xavier, Dayton
5TexasLamar, Texas A&M, Baylor, TCU, Texas
4LouisianaLouisiana Tech, Southern U., Tulane, LSU
4VirginiaHampton., James Madison, Liberty, Virginia
3IowaUNI, Iowa, Iowa St.
3New YorkMarist, St. Francis PA, St. John's NY
3North CarolinaDuke, North Carolina, North Carolina St.
2ConnecticutConnecticut, Hartford
2GeorgiaGeorgia, Georgia Tech
2New JerseyPrinceton, Rutgers
2OklahomaOklahoma, Oklahoma St.
2PennsylvaniaLehigh, Temple
2WisconsinGreen Bay, Wisconsin
1ArkansasUALR
1District of ColumbiaGeorgetown
1FloridaFlorida St.
1IllinoisDePaul
1IndianaNotre Dame
1KentuckyKentucky
1MichiganMichigan St.
1MississippiMississippi St.
1NebraskaNebraska
1OregonPortland St.
1South DakotaSouth Dakota St.
1VermontVermont
1WashingtonGonzaga
1West VirginiaWest Virginia

Game summaries

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Dayton region

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First round

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Sixth seeded St. John's took on the eleventh seeded Ivy League champion Princeton. The Tigers had won their last 21 games, the nation's third longest win streak. While Princeton stayed close early, only down 15–12 at one time, they missed 15 of their next sixteen shots while St. John's pulled out to a sixteen-point halftime lead. The two teams played roughly evenly the second half, but the halftime lead was more than enough and the Red Storm prevailed 65–47.[17]

Fourteenth seeded Louisiana Tech (La Tech) was returning to the NCAA Tournament after a three-year absence. Under Maggie Dixon award winning new coach Teresa Weatherspoon, the Lady Techsters took on third seeded Florida State. La tech started out strong, pulling out to a nine-point lead late in the first half, but the Seminoles fought back to a 40–40 tie at halftime. The score was close well into the second half, with Florida State holding onto a one-point lead with just under nine minutes to go, but the Seminoles gradually increased the lead to ten. Although the Lady Techsters cut the lead in half to 65–61 with just under two minutes left, they would not score again and Florida State would hit ten straight free throws in the closing minutes to win 75–61.[18]

Second round

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Kansas City region

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First round

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Michigan State's fifth year senior Aisha Jefferson had stomach problems from a pre-game meal severe enough to keep her hunched over the front of a trash can in the first half, but it wasn't enough to keep her out of the game. She scored 17 points along with nine rebounds to help lead the fifth seeded Spartans over 12 seed Bowling Green 72–62.[19]

Thirteenth seeded Liberty tried to challenge fourth seeded Kentucky, scoring the first six points, and leading by as much as nine early, but Kentucky's freshman A'dia Mathies, scored 32 points to set a personal career high and an NCAA tournament record for Kentucky to help the Wildcats retake the lead. The Liberty Flames fought back, and had a slim two-point lead at halftime, but the Kentucky team, behind 26 of 36 free-throws, pulled ahead to win 83–77.[20]

Second round

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Memphis region

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First round

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Seventh seeded LSU easily beat tenth seeded Hartford 60–39. This was Hartford's first at-large invitation to the NCAA Tournament, but without leading scorer Erica Beverly, lost to a season-ending injury, the Hawks were unable to stay with the Tigers. LSU held Hartford scoreless for nearly eight minutes, scoring 17 consecutive points to take an early lead they would never give up.[21]

Top seeded Tennessee defeated 16 seed Austin Peay 75–42. Playing at their home court "The Summitt", the Lady Vols scored 15 points before allowing a score by the Lady Govs.[22]

Second-seeded Duke took on 15 seed Hampton in Cameron Indoor Stadium, the Blue Devils home court, where Duke had won twelve consecutive NCAA Tournament games. The Pirates managed to hold a slim lead in the early minutes of the game, but Duke quickly took over, moving out to a 40–14 halftime lead and winning easily 72–37.[23]

Eighth seeded Dayton took on ninth seeded TCU in their first ever NCAA appearance. Early in the second half, it appeared that Dayton would only be playing one game, as they were behind by 18 points, 50–32. However, the Flyers did not fold, and hit a basket with one second left in the game to win by a single point 67–66.[24]

Twelve seed Marist scored the first seven points in their game against five seed Georgetown, which may have reminded fans of the way Marist played in 2007, coming to the tournament as a 13 seed, and knocking off Ohio State and Middle Tennessee to make it to the round of sixteen. Georgetown, which hasn't been to the tournament in 17 years, started slowly, but managed to hold a two-point lead at halftime. Georgetown's Monica McNutt hit back-to-back three-pointers to start a 13–0 run at the beginning of the second half. The Red Foxes would never close the gap, and Georgetown went on to win 62–42.[25]

Fourth seed Baylor took on 13th seed Fresno State. Baylor's Brittney Griner returned to the floor, after sitting out a two-game suspension for hitting an opponent in a game. This was freshman Griner's first tournament, and she confessed to having jitters, but she controlled the lane, and help keep Fresno State from winning their first ever NCAA game. Baylor held a six-point lead at halftime, which they stretched out to a 69–55 final score.[26]

Sacramento region

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First round

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A fifteen seed has never beaten a two seed in the NCAA Women's Tournament, but with under five minutes left in the first half, 15th seeded Portland State was ahead of the second seed Texas A&M. The lead didn't last long, as the Aggies pulled to an eight-point lead at halftime, and extended the lead through the second half. Texas A&M's Tanisha Smith just missed a triple double, with nine assist to go along with 17 points and 10 rebounds. The final score favored the Aggies 84–53.[27]

Normally, a four seed would be a large favorite against a 13 seed, but normally, the four seed isn't required to bench one of their players, and not just any player, but Andrea Riley, the third leading scorer in Division 1. Two years earlier, Riley had thrown punch in an NCAA game, which earned her a one-game suspension. NCAA rules required that it be an NCAA game. Oklahoma State lost the game in which the punch was thrown, and did not make it to the Tournament in 2009, so the suspension was served two years later. The 13th seeded Chattanooga tried to take advantage of the situation, and led by as much as 18 in the first half. Riley could only cheer on the team from the bench. Freshman Toni Young responded by scoring 22 points, and senior Tegan Cunningham, after struggling in the first half, began hitting in the second half and ended up with 25 points, enough to help Oklahoma State win 70–63.[28]

The 8/9 match-up between Iowa and Rutgers pitted current Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer against the program she helped bring to national prominence two decades earlier. Iowa had lost a game in the Big Ten tournament, after a big lead, and they didn't want to experience that again. Rutgers played even with the Hawkeyes, in the second half, but the seven point halftime lead stood up and Iowa won 70–63.[29]

Seventh seed Gonzaga took on tenth seeded North Carolina. Gonzaga's Tiffanie Shives was scoreless for 31 minutes, but then scored 14 in the next five minutes. Her first basket cut the Tarheels lead to two, and her next basket gave Gonzaga a lead they would not relinquish, although North Carolina cut the lead to one with under four minutes to go, only to fall short 82–76.[30]

Twelfth seed Tulane stayed with fifth seed Georgia for 32 minutes, in a game with five lead changes and four ties, but then the Bulldogs went on an 18–2 run to take the lead for good. Georgia's Ashley Houts would score 22 points for the winning team, and teammate Angel Robinson had a double-double (18 points, 13 rebounds) to help lead the Bulldogs over the Green Wave 64–59.[31]

The last time Stanford was a number 1 seed, they became to only top seed in the men's or women's tournament to lose to a sixteen seed. Earlier in the day, the top seeded men's team, Kansas, lost to Northern Iowa, so no one felt safe in the opening match against UC Riverside. Stanford jumped out to an 8–0 lead, and behind Ogwumike's double-double (19 points, 11 rebounds) won easily over the Big West champion 79–47.[32]

Second round

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Brackets

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Results to date (* indicates game went to overtime):

Dayton Regional – Dayton, Ohio

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First round
March 20–21
Second round
March 22–23
Regional semifinals
March 28
Regional finals
March 30
            
1Connecticut95
16Southern39
1Connecticut90
Norfolk, Virginia
8Temple36
8Temple65
9James Madison53
1Connecticut74
4Iowa State36
5Virginia67
12Green Bay69
12Green Bay56
Ames, Iowa
4Iowa State60
4Iowa State79
13Lehigh42
1Connecticut90
3Florida State50
6St. John's65
11Princeton47
6St. John's65
Tallahassee, Florida
3Florida State66*
3Florida State75
14Louisiana Tech61
3Florida State74
7Mississippi State71
7Mississippi State68
10Middle Tennessee64
7Mississippi State87
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
2Ohio State67
2Ohio State93
15St. Francis (Pa.)59

Memphis Regional – Memphis, Tennessee

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First round
March 20–21
Second round
March 22–23
Regional semifinals
March 27
Regional finals
March 29
            
1Tennessee75
16Austin Peay42
1Tennessee92
Knoxville, Tennessee
8Dayton64
8Dayton67
9TCU66
1Tennessee62
4Baylor77
5Georgetown62
12Marist42
5Georgetown33
Berkeley, California
4Baylor49
4Baylor69
13Fresno State55
4Baylor51
2Duke48
6Texas63
11San Diego State74
11San Diego State64
Austin, Texas
3West Virginia55
3West Virginia58
14Lamar43
11San Diego State58
2Duke66
7LSU60
10Hartford39
7LSU52
Durham, North Carolina
2Duke60
2Duke72
15Hampton37

Sacramento Regional – Sacramento, California

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First round
March 20–21
Second round
March 22–23
Regional semifinals
March 27
Regional finals
March 29
            
1Stanford79
16UC Riverside47
1Stanford96
Stanford, California
8Iowa67
8Iowa70
9Rutgers63
1Stanford73
5Georgia36
5Georgia64
12Tulane59
5Georgia74*
Tempe, Arizona
4Oklahoma State71
4Oklahoma State70
13Chattanooga63
1Stanford55
3Xavier53
6Vanderbilt83*
11DePaul76
6Vanderbilt62
Cincinnati, Ohio
3Xavier63
3Xavier94
14East Tennessee State82
3Xavier74
7Gonzaga56
7Gonzaga82
10North Carolina76
7Gonzaga72
Seattle, WA
2Texas A&M71
2Texas A&M84
15Portland State53

Kansas City Regional – Kansas City, Missouri

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First round
March 20–21
Second round
March 22–23
Regional semifinals
March 28
Regional finals
March 30
            
1Nebraska83
16Northern Iowa44
1Nebraska83
Minneapolis, Minnesota
8UCLA70
8UCLA74
9NC State54
1Nebraska67
4Kentucky76
5Michigan State72
12Bowling Green62
5Michigan State52
Louisville, Kentucky
4Kentucky70
4Kentucky83
13Liberty77
4Kentucky68
3Oklahoma88
6Georgia Tech53
11Arkansas-Little Rock63
11Arkansas-Little Rock44
Norman, Oklahoma
3Oklahoma60
3Oklahoma68
14South Dakota State57
3Oklahoma77*
2Notre Dame72
7Wisconsin55
10Vermont64
10Vermont66
Notre Dame, Indiana
2Notre Dame84
2Notre Dame86
15Cleveland State58

Final Four – San Antonio, Texas

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National Semifinals
April 4
National Championship Game
April 6
      
D1Connecticut70
M4Baylor50
D1Connecticut53
S1Stanford47
S1Stanford73
K3Oklahoma66

Record by conference

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Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Big 12714–7.6676422
Big East711–6.64752111
ACC66–6.500222
SEC611–6.647641
Big Ten43–4.4293
Atlantic 1035–3.625311
America East21–2.3331
Horizon21–2.3331
Mountain West22–2.50011
Pac-1026–2.75021111
Sun Belt21–2.3331
WAC20–2.000
West Coast12–1.66711

Eighteen conferences went 0–1: the Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Big West, Colonial, Conference USA, Ivy League, MAAC, MEAC, MAC, Missouri Valley, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Patriot, Southern, Southland, SWAC and Summit.

All-Tournament team

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Game officials

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  • Tina Napier(semifinal)
  • Bryan Enterline (semifinal)
  • Denise Brooks (semifinal)
  • Lisa Mattingly (semifinal)
  • Michael Price (semifinal)
  • Laura Morris (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (final)
  • Eric Brewton (final)
  • Lisa Jones (final) [16]

Media coverage

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Television

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ESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament. For the first and second round, ESPN aired select games nationally on ESPN or ESPNU. All other games were aired regionally on ESPN2 and streamed online via ESPN3. Most of the nation got whip-a-round coverage during this time, which allowed ESPN to rotate between the games and focus the nation on the one that was the closest. The regional semifinals were split between ESPN and ESPN2, and ESPN aired the regional finals, national semifinals, and championship match.[33]

Studio host and analysts

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Commentary teams

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "NCAA DIVISION I WOMEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES FOR ESTABLISHING THE BRACKET" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved January 27, 2023. The committee will attempt to achieve relative balance in the bracket and provide comparable competition, while abiding by the remaining principles.
  2. ^ LONGMAN, JERÉ (March 27, 2010). "Lady Vols' Bad Start Only Gets Worse". New York Times. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  3. ^ "Complete Play-By-Play". ESPN. March 29, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  4. ^ FitzGerald, Tom (March 30, 2010). "Thriller to the very end". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  5. ^ "Top-seeded Nebraska falls to No. 4 Kentucky". Philly.com. March 29, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  6. ^ Russell, Annelise (March 28, 2010). "OU pushes past Notre Dame for Elite Eight berth". The Oklahoma Daily. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  7. ^ ARATON, HARVEY (April 5, 2010). "UConn Teeters in Semifinal, but It's Baylor That Falls". New York Times. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  8. ^ "Complete Play-By-Play". ESPN. April 4, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  9. ^ Wang, Gene (April 5, 2010). "Connecticut Huskies defeat Baylor Bears in women's Final Four". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  10. ^ Wang, Gene (April 5, 2010). "Stanford Cardinal defeats Oklahoma Sooners in Women's Final Four". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  11. ^ "Stanford Women's Basketball 2012–13 Record Book". Stanford University. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  12. ^ ARATON, HARVEY (April 6, 2010). "Moore Leads Connecticut to Women's Title". New York Times. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  13. ^ "UConn overcomes 12-point first half to squeeze past Stanford for second straight title". ESPN. April 6, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  14. ^ a b c "NCAA Championships". Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved March 28, 2009.
  15. ^ "First and second round games will move from Albuquerque to Stanford in 2010". NCAA. Retrieved August 19, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Nixon, Rick. "Official 2012 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  17. ^ "St. John's closes first half on 27-8 run to blow past Princeton". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  18. ^ "Monroe, Ward lead Florida State past Louisiana Tech". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Archived from the original on April 5, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  19. ^ Hays, Graham (March 20, 2010). "Jefferson helps Sparty stomach BGSU". ESPN. Archived from the original on March 26, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  20. ^ "Mathies scores 32 as Wildcats move into second round". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  21. ^ "LSU uses 17-0 run to win tournament game for 12th straight season". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  22. ^ "Cain has 18 points, 12 rebounds in Lady Vols' rout of Lady Govs". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  23. ^ "Jackson leads three Blue Devils with 13 apiece in rout of Pirates". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  24. ^ "Dayton rallies from 18 points down to reach second round". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  25. ^ "Georgetown ends NCAA drought with win over Marist". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  26. ^ "Griner powers Baylor past Fresno State in tournament debut". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Archived from the original on April 13, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  27. ^ "Smith assist short of triple-double as Aggies down Vikings". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  28. ^ Voepel, Mechelle (March 20, 2010). "Cowgirls survive life without Riley". ESPN. Archived from the original on April 24, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  29. ^ "Wahlin sparks late run as Iowa downs former coach Stringer, Rutgers". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  30. ^ "Shives scores 14 in 5-minute spurt to power Gonzaga past North Carolina". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  31. ^ "Houts pushes Georgia past Tulane in opening round". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  32. ^ "Ogwumike posts double-double as Stanford moves on". ESPN. March 20, 2010. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  33. ^ "ESPN Networks' NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament Schedule Features All 63 Games". ESPN. March 15, 2010. Archived from the original on March 28, 2014. Retrieved March 15, 2010.